Legislators, School Administrators Back Off Cellphone Search Bill After Running Into ACLU Opposition
from the shocked-SHOCKED dept
Legislators working with the Association of California School Administrators are backing away slowly from a bill aiming to separate schoolchildren from their phones and their privacy. The bill would have created an exception in California's privacy law, allowing teachers and school administrators to search the contents of students' phones. Courthouse News' Nick Cahill has more details:
While short in length, the bill has stature. Its 130 words would exempt students from the California Electronic Communications Privacy Act, CalECPA, which was passed in 2015 with overwhelming bipartisan support in the Legislature.
“That law also specifies the conditions under which a government entity may access electronic device information by means of physical interaction or electronic communication with the device, such as pursuant to a search warrant, wiretap order, or consent of the owner of the device,” the new bill states.
This attempt to further limit students' Constitutional rights and legal protections ran into the ACLU's opposition, which noted the exception would "sledgehammer" the Fourth Amendment. Apparently, the backers of the bill thought it would sail through with a minimum of public resistance. Having failed to foresee the expected, supporters are rebranding their civil liberties sledgehammer.
“We’re making it a two-year bill, which means it’s not going to be heard next week. But the conversations are going to continue,” said Laura Preston, lobbyist for the school administrators.
Ah, the classic "wait until the noise dies down and try again" approach. It's just crazy enough it might work. I doubt the legislation itself will be rethought. More likely, the sales pitch will be altered to make the bill appear less sledgehammer-y.
Considering California is pretty much Protest Central, it's a bit stunning to read a legislator was "stunned" by collective opposition to a privacy-threatening bill. But that's exactly how the bill's author, Jim Cooper, described his reaction. The lobbyist for the schools, Laura Preston, went even further, utilizing the post-Godwin Nuclear Option rhetorical device:
“We introduced the bill to try and pull schools out of CalECPA, and you might as well have thought that we started World War III,” Preston said of the reaction.
Supporters of the bill claim the lack of an exception to the privacy law leaves administrators powerless. True, a school administrator can't seek a warrant to access the contents of a student's phone, but there are options schools can use rather than exempt every California student from the state's privacy law.
Most schools have electronic device policies that tie search consent to school attendance, which usually includes personal electronic devices along with vehicles parked on school grounds and lockers. A consensual search -- even if performed under an "implied consent" standard rather than a more affirmative version -- is still a "clean" search, though possibly one less likely to survive a courtroom challenge. Many schools also have police officers on staff. Whether or not these officers can seek warrants to access phone contents is unclear, but in cases of suspected criminal conduct, this would be turned over to law enforcement anyway.
Supporters undercut their Homeroom Apocalypse arguments with their own statements, though.
Since CalECPA was enacted, students have been refusing to hand over their cellphones to teachers and administrators, Preston said. She said teachers usually want access to cellphones to prevent cyberbullying and cheating on tests, not to delve into social media or text messages for criminal content.
I'd really like to hear how paging through some kid's phone "prevents cyberbullying." It may be used to find evidence of ongoing cyberbullying, but it's not going to head it off. If it's really bullying, there are a variety of school policies and law enforcement options available to school administrators that don't involve digging through a student's phone -- a device that will contain far, far more personal info than should be sought by administrators with zero law enforcement training or acumen.
Cheating on tests can be resolved simply by requiring phones to be secured somewhere away from the testing area, like in students' lockers or in instructors' possession until testing is complete. Digging through someone's phone might expose a cheater, but it really seems like overkill considering the privacy issues at stake. It's also not something that should involve any on-site law enforcement officers, even if their powers are slightly limited.
What is clear is "stunned" politicians and school administrators haven't given up on their dream of crushing students' Fourth Amendment protections. No doubt the ACLU -- and others -- will be keeping an eye out for Sledgehammer 2.0 later this year.
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Filed Under: 4th amendment, california, mobile phones, privacy, schools, searches
Companies: aclu
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I mean there are cases where teachers have had sex with students, won't someone think of the children?
Oh you're complaining its invading your rights??
ProTip: If you aren't willing to be bound to the same terms, its a bad idea.
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Phones and cheat sheets and the teacher telling the class to make them...
I don't see why a cheat screen on a phone would be any different...the act of creating it would be the act of studying the material. And if you were lazy and copied? You would *still* have a hard time on the test!
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Re: Phones and cheat sheets and the teacher telling the class to make them...
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So if you want to search MY Cell Phone, well then you can kiss my 4th amendment lovin' keister!
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My how things have changed... for the better!
Now they have damn near as many rights as adults! And they STILL have their special protections as well! They got it good these days.
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Re: My how things have changed... for the better!
The 14th amendment went into effect in 1868, which declared that citizenship begins at birth and did not exempt kids from being citizens. If that's the law you're referring to from when you were a kid, that would make you a minimum of 166 years old.
Even if you're referring to the Tinker v. Des Moines Supreme Court case, that would make you a minimum of 65 years old -- that case was in 1969 and ruled that kids DO have rights, always have had rights, and a school needed a damned good reason to try to infringe upon those rights (which the school district in question in that case did not have).
If you are younger than 245, then you are mistaken about kids not having constitutional rights when you were a kid. People younger than 65 don't even have the excuse of kids having rights being an unknown thing when they were kids.
There is no age requirement on citizenship, it begins at birth. Citizens have rights, period. Government officials have always gotten drunk on their petty amounts of power and used it to violate the rights of others. That's nothing new.
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Re: Re: My how things have changed... for the better!
They could search your bags, your person, your locker, your car (if you actually had one)... all without any cause or permission. If drug tests had been a thing back then, they'd have done it!
School papers could be censored (and were), dress codes were enforced without recourse, meetings on school could be monitored and banned - basically, there was no first amendment as far as students were concerned. Again, only the rich and connected were exempt from any of this, and there was no recourse for the average student.
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And by the by, I'm 42.
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Anywho, the whole point was that I'm (pleasantly) surprised at how good kids have it today. True, they have their own problems, but First and Fourth Amendment violations are not (often) one of them.
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Isn't that always true? Legally, a child CANNOT sign the service contract or assume any obligations it imposes.
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What 4th Amendment?
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skools & airports
If anyone really cared about the Fourth or Fifth Amendments -- compulsory school attendance laws would not exist.
The main function of the public school is not education but social control.
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~People in general regardless of party!
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Secondary goals
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Compulsory attendance is consent now?
Compared to that voting, having a job and owning a house are much more voluntary acts. By the standard the school districts like to argue, any sort of voluntary participation in society could be made into a voluntary waiver of your rights without violating the Constitution. Even if it's only 'voluntary' in the sense you get forced to volunteer at gunpoint if you decide not to volunteer.
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Re: Compulsory attendance is consent now?
Not strictly true, the requirement on parents is to ensure that their children have an education. Parent can provide that at home for their children, and some do.
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Re: Compulsory attendance
it is a crime for parents NOT to school their children in a government-approved program, including home schooling.
Rules vary among states, but in all cases the government gets the final say in what is an "acceptable" home schooling program by individual parents. Parents often have to register with the local school district, adhere to state curriculum requirements, and submit formal reportd on their child's schooling progress.
90% of Americans attend public schools; home schooling is 1-2%. The government commands it all... with criminal law.
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Re: Compulsory attendance is consent now?
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As far as searching the phones, a better approach might be to task a set of judges to be on call to issue warrants based on requests from school administrators. That way, student's rights are preserved.
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If bags must be searched, what for? A clear distinction needs to be made between sweeties and guns, for example. I'd also insist on probable cause and a full report on each search so you don't get over-eager school staff searching the bags of kids they don't like at will.
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